Marvin Camel Explained

Marvin Camel
Weight:
Height:6 ft. 2 in. (188 cm.)
Reach:79 in. (201 cm.)
Birth Date:December 24, 1951
Birth Place:Ronan, Montana, U.S.
Style:Southpaw
Total:62
Wins:45
Ko:21
Losses:13
Draws:4

Marvin Camel (born December 24, 1951) is an American former professional boxer who competed from 1974 to 1990. He was the first cruiserweight world champion, having held the WBC title in 1980 and the IBF title from 1983 to 1984.[1]

Professional boxing career

Camel fought Mate Parlov in Yugoslavia to a draw in the first ever cruiserweight world title bout. In the rematch, in Las Vegas, Camel beat Mate Parlov for the vacant WBC world Cruiserweight title in 1980, losing the title in his first defense, to Carlos De León who replaced David Pearce. After losing in a rematch to De Leon, he became, in 1983, the IBF's first world champion, by beating Roddy McDonald who also replaced David Pearce after the BBBoC would not sanction the Cruiserweight division in the UK and thus becoming world Cruiserweight champion for the second time when he claimed that organization's title. He later lost the title to Lee Roy Murphy.

He lost his final bout in June 1990 against Eddie “Young Joe Louis” Taylor in Minneapolis. The 10-round decision left his lifetime mark at 45-13-5.

Camel's pro career took him from Ronan to 13 states and seven foreign nations on three continents.

“I’ve had a good life, as far as boxing is concerned, winning two world titles, losing world titles, seeing the world,” Camel said in 2015. “Some things people only dream about having, I did it. I’ve been there. I’ve been to the top of the mountain. But I feel there’s still something out there that I’ve got to have, and I don’t know what it is.” [2]

He is the subject of a biography released in December 2014, titled 'Warrior in the Ring' by Brian D'Ambrosio.[3] [4] The book was nominated for the High Plains Book Award and several other awards.

In December 2014, D'Ambrosio and Camel attended the 52nd Annual World Boxing Convention.[5]

Honors

In 2006 at the World Boxing Council's 44th annual convention WBC President José Sulaimán awarded Camel honorary champion status.

Professional boxing record

ResultRecordOpponentTypeRound, timeDateLocationNotes
62Loss45–13–4Eddie TaylorMD1011 Jun 1990
61Loss45–12–4Joe HippTKO6 (10)2 Dec 1989
60Win45–11–4Jerome HillUD86 Nov 1989
59Win44–11–4J.J. CottrellUD1025 Sep 1989
58Draw43–11–4Trent SurrattTD1 (?), 10 Aug 1989
57Loss43–11–3James SalernoTKO631 May 1988
56Loss43–10–3Ralf RocchigianiPTS1026 Apr 1988
55Loss43–9–3Taoufik BelbouliTKO410 Oct 1987
54Loss43–8–3Virgil HillKO1 (10), 1 May 1987
53Loss43–7–3José María Flores BurlónUD108 Aug 1986
52Draw43–6–3Jimmy BillsPTS1022 May 1986
51Loss43–6–2Lee Roy MurphyRTD14 (15), 6 Oct 1984
50Win43–5–2Roddy MacDonaldTKO5 (15), 13 Dec 1983
49Win42–5–2Rocky SekorskiRTD8 (12)21 May 1983
48Loss41–5–2John OdhiambhoTKO2 (8) 11 Feb 1983
47Win41–4–2Leonardo RodgersRTD4 (12)30 Jun 1982
46Loss40–4–2Carlos de LeónTKO8 (15)24 Feb 1982
45Win40–3–2Bash AliUD122 Oct 1981
44Win39–3–2Willie ShannonTKO3 (12), 11 Aug 1981
43Win38–3–2Rahim MuhammadUD125 May 1981
42Win37–3–2Ron DraperTKO6 (10), 24 Apr 1981
41Loss36–3–2Carlos de LeónMD1525 Noc 1980
40Win36–2–2Mate ParlovUD1531 Mar 1980
39 Draw35–2–2Mate ParlovMD158 Dec 1979
38Win35–2–1David CabreraKO3 (10), 30 Aug 1979
37Win34–2–1Macka FoleyTKO2 (10), 1 Aug 1979
36Win33–2–1Bill SharkeyUD125 Jun 1979
35Win32–2–1David SmithTKO 9 (10)24 Apr 1979
34Win31–2–1Jim IngramUD1028 Feb 1979
33Win30–2–1Bob HeflinKO2 (10), 3 Jan 1979
32Win29–2–1Tom BetheaKO2 (12), 11 Nov 1978
31Win28–2–1Dale GrantUD1213 Sep 1978
30Win27–2–1Ibar ArringtonUD1022 Aug 1978
29Win26–2–1Chuck WarfieldKO5 (10)27 May 1978
28Win25–2–1Pete McIntyreUD107 Apr 1978
27Win24–2–1Bobby LloydUD109 Mar 1978
26Win23–2–1David SmithUD108 Feb 1978
25Win22–2–1Karl ZurheideRTD7 (10), 8 Dec 1977
24Win21–2–1Ron WilsonUD1029 Aug 1977
23Loss20–2–1Danny BrewerTKO6 (10)28 Jun 1977
22Win20–1–1Gary SummerhaysUD126 May 1977
21Draw19–1–1Dale GrantPTS1015 Feb 1977
20Win19–1Lionel FordUD1026 Jan 1977
19Win18–1Larry CastanedaUD1020 Nov 1976
18Win17–1Matthew Saad MuhammadMD1023 Oct 1976
17Win16–1Johnny TownsendUD1025 Sep 1976
16Win15–1Johnny TownsendUD1028 Aug 1976
15Loss14–1Matthew Saad MuhammadSD1017 Jul 1976
14Win14–0Angel OquendoUD108 May 1976
13Win13–0Rafael GutierrezUD107 Apr 1976
12Win12–0Don MelonconTKO3 (10), 18 Feb 1976
11Win11–0Pedro VegaKO1 (10), 14 Jan 1976
10Win10–0Danny BrewerUD1019 Nov 1975
9Win9–0Terry LeeTKO8 (10), 24 Sep 1975
8Win8–0Ron WilsonUD1020 Aug 1975
7Win7–0Fernando Lee JonesRTD6 (10)28 May 1975
6Win6–0Amado VasquezKO3 (10), 30 Apr 1975
5Win5–0Jack JohnsonUD82 Apr 1975
4Win4–0Chico ValdezKO2 (6), 19 Feb 1975
3Win3–0George ClarkTKO4 (6), 22 Jan 1975
2Win2–0James T. JacksonTKO4 (6), 25 Feb 1974
1Win1–0Joe WilliamsonTKO1 (4), 25 Jun 1973

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Marvin Camel - Lineal Cruiserweight Champion. The Cyber Boxing Zone Encyclopedia.
  2. Web site: New biography helps Marvin Camel fight time, obscurity. February 28, 2015 .
  3. Web site: Montana Magazine . 19 June 2014 . 27 April 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140427074140/http://montanamagazine.com/warrior-in-the-ring-looking-back-with-marvin-camel/ . dead .
  4. News: LaTray. Chris. Lost Champ (Book review). Missoula Independent. 5 March 2015. .
  5. Web site: Resurrecting the Legend of Marvin Camel. 2 January 2015.